Corrections: September 18, 2014

Sept. 18, 2014

BUSINESS DAY

The Wealth Matters column on Saturday, about philanthropic efforts by Hispanic-Americans, described incompletely the mission of the organization Give to Colombia. The group serves vulnerable populations; it does not focus solely on educating young people who left the guerrilla movement. The column also misstated the amount of money the organization has raised in the last 10 years and how many projects it finances. It has raised $19.4 million — not $22 million, which is its estimate for what it will have raised by the close of this year. And it has financed 175 projects, not 157.

SPORTS

The On Baseball column on Tuesday, about the major leagues’ postseason picture and some players’ statistical pursuits, misidentified the National League player who led in hitting before Monday’s games. The Pirates’ Josh Harrison was first, with a .317 average — not the Giants’ Buster Posey, who was hitting .311. The column also erroneously attributed a distinction to Carl Yastrzemski. Though he won the American League batting title, in 1968, with an average of .301, he is not the only player to have won with an average below .311. Elmer Flick did so, in 1905 (hitting .308), as did Snuffy Stirnweiss, in 1945 (with .309).

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An article on Friday about Notre Dame’s lucrative sports apparel deal with Under Armour referred incorrectly to a $400 million renovation of Notre Dame Stadium. The project is set to break ground in November; it has not been completed.

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A Sports of The Times column on Sept. 8, about the effect of Colorado’s new marijuana-friendly laws on the Denver Broncos’ football tailgating scene, erroneously included an excerpt, in some copies, about one team’s marijuana policy. The statement — “It is illegal to consume marijuana in public. Smoking or consuming marijuana is prohibited in all areas of Coors Field, including the designated smoking areas” — is on the website of the Colorado Rockies baseball team, which plays at Coors Field; it is not on the website of the Broncos, who play at Sports Authority Field at Mile High.

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An article in some editions on Sunday about the effect an upheaval in top management at Ferrari might have on the automobile manufacturer’s racing operations misspelled the surname of the last Ferrari team driver to win a Formula One world drivers’ championship, in 2007. He is Kimi Raikkonen, not Raikonnen.

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An article on Friday about the United States’ 96-68 victory over Lithuania in the semifinals of the men’s basketball World Cup in Barcelona, Spain, referred incorrectly to its victory in Barcelona at the 1992 Olympics. Although the squad, nicknamed the Dream Team, did defeat Croatia for the championship, the game against Croatia in which Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen overtly tried to shut down Toni Kukoc’s offense was in a preliminary round, not in the gold medal contest.

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An article on Aug. 29 about the Yankees’ 3-2 loss to the Detroit Tigers referred incorrectly in some editions to the pitch from the Yankees’ Shawn Kelley that the Tigers’ Alex Avila hit to end the game in the ninth inning. It was Kelley’s 27th pitch of the game, not his 17th.

THE ARTS

A dance review on Sept. 8 about the Mazzini Dance Collective, at the Ailey Citigroup Theater in Manhattan, misidentified two of the instruments used to play the music that accompanied the dance “Playing With Angels.” They were bassoons, not oboes.

OBITUARIES

An obituary on Wednesday about the impresario Tibor Rudas, and an accompanying picture caption, referred incorrectly to the credit “Tibor Rudas Presents the Three Tenors.” It was part of the title of almost every one of the Three Tenors’ CDs and concerts — not every one.

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An obituary on Monday about the pianist Joe Sample misstated the year his album “Soul Shadows” was released. It was 2004, not 2008.

HOME

A report on Aug. 28 in the Currents column about new furniture by British designers sold at Crate & Barrel misstated the width of the Freemont table designed by Russell Pinch. It is 38 inches wide, not 30.

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Because of an editing error, the Shopping With column last Thursday, about outdoor tables selected by Jonathan Olivares, misidentified Mr. Olivares’s profession. He is an industrial designer, not a furniture designer.

STYLE

A picture last Thursday with an article about Josh Bennett, who hand-knits sweaters for prominent designers, was published in error. The sweater depicting a sunrise over a blue horizon was not knit by Mr. Bennett for the designer Michael Bastian; Mr. Bastian’s company produced it.

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An article last Thursday about watching fashion shows from the last rows of seats misidentified the show at which Ellen Thomas was interviewed. It was Alexander Wang’s show, not Prabal Gurung’s. The article also misstated the date of that interview; it was Sept. 6 (the date of the Prabal Gurung show), not Sept. 7. The article also misstated the name of Ms. Thomas’s employer. It is StyleList.com, not Style Lyst. And, finally, the article described StyleList.com incorrectly. It is a fashion and beauty website, not an AOL fashion blog.

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An article last Thursday about parties held in conjunction with New York Fashion Week misspelled the surname of a performer at a party held by Calvin Klein. She is Rita Ora, not Oro.

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